4. In November 1943, Stalin, Churchill, and Roosevelt met in Tehran to decide the future course of the war. “ Big 3”
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8. The Soviets wanted these nations to be pro-Soviet. The Americans wanted free elections.
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11. This “iron curtain” divided Europe into two hostile sides. Stalin responded by calling Churchill’s speech a “call to war with the Soviet Union.”
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34. Britain: morale remained high. The idea that bombing civilians would force peace was proved wrong. The bombing of Germany added to civilian terror. The Germans particularly feared incendiary bombs, which spread fire when they exploded.
35. In Dresden enormous firestorms resulted from the bombing, killing 100,000s of people and burning everything that could burn. The bombing of Germany by the Allies may have killed a half-million civilians
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37. The bombing of civilians reached an unprecedented level when the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August of 1945.